Patanjali's emphasis on inner work over external achievement, protecting trauma survivors from performative healing and competitive practice.
Patanjali distinguishes between bahiranga (external) and antaranga (internal) sadhana—outer practices and inner transformation. While yoga classes emphasize spectacular postures, Patanjali's hierarchy places dharana (concentration), dhyana (meditation), and samadhi (integration) above asana mastery. For trauma survivors, this is liberating. Many have learned to perform wellness while suffering internally, masking pain to meet others' expectations. Antaranga sadhana validates that true healing is internal and invisible. A trauma survivor's gentle five-minute meditation where they notice one moment of safety is profoundly more important than a perfect downward dog. This framework protects survivors from re-traumatizing competitive yoga culture where performance becomes another arena for self-judgment. Patanjali teaches that genuine practice is about progressive deepening of awareness, not achievement. By centering internal experience—what you feel, observe, and integrate—rather than external demonstration, survivors can heal authentically without spiritual bypassing or performance pressure.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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